Epreuves D'admission

Epreuves D'admission

EPREUVES D’ADMISSION SESSION DE MARS 2016 LANGUE DE TRAVAIL : ANGLAIS Epreuve de la matinée : 9h – 13h - Visionnage de la vidéo - Lecture des documents - Synthèse - Traduction I. DOSSIER Doc. 1 Jay Z’s music-streaming service Tidal struggles despite celebrity fanfare It had the backing of artists such as Kanye West and Rihanna and was hailed as the music industry’s salvation, but Tidal is showing early signs of failure It was launched at a star-studded event where Daft Punk came in full costume, Alicia Keys quoted Nietzsche and Madonna mounted a table while wearing tight leather trousers. But despite its extravagant beginnings, Tidal, the music-streaming service fronted by Jay Z and with the backing of artists including Kanye West and Rihanna, is showing signs of failure. Less than a month after some of the biggest names in music declared Tidal would be the salvation of the industry, the app has dropped out of the iPhone top 700 downloads chart. The news will be an embarrassment to the service, which Jay Z and co-owners including Beyoncé, Jack White and Usher pledged would become a challenger to streaming platforms such as Spotify and Pandora. Jay Z acquired Aspiro, the company behind Tidal, in March for $56m (£37m), in a takeover bid that was almost rejected by a group of minority shareholders. Talking about his vision for the service, the multimillionaire rapper said he and his roster of celebrity supporters wanted Tidal to be the first artist-owned music streaming platform that would pay 75% of its revenues back to the music industry (compared with the 50% paid by Spotify and Pandora). Jay Z said: “We didn’t like the direction music was going and thought maybe we could get in and strike an honest blow and if the very least we did was make people wake up and try to improve the free paid system, and promote fair trade, then it would be a win for us anyway.” It was a view echoed by Keys, who told the press conference: “We’re gathered … with one voice in unity in the hopes that today will be another one of those moments in time, a moment that will forever change the course of music history.” But despite the celebrity fanfare, the early signs of failure of Tidal may not come as a surprise to many others within the music community who have been more cynical about the service’s prospects. To begin with, Tidal comes with a higher price tag than its rivals, costing $20 a month, and does not have the free, ad-supported option offered by services such as Spotify. For this higher subscription fee, Tidal users have access to 25m tracks, about the same number as Spotify, but it also offers a lossless high-fidelity sound quality that its competitors don’t have, as well as HD music videos and music playlists curated by musicians such as Jay Z and Beyoncé. But music industry commentators have argued that this is not enough to encourage people to part with more than the £4.99 it currently costs for unlimited, ad-free streaming on Spotify or the £9.99 for full premium access. Indeed, while Tidal has fallen spectacularly down the app charts in the past month, both Spotify and Pandora have soared to take third and fourth places in the charts, the first time two music streaming services have hit the top four in sales simultaneously – even displacing the addictive game Candy Crush. Bob Lefsetz, the leading music critic and industry analyst, said Tidal did not have what it takes to dominate the already crowded streaming market, which is set to get even more congested this year when Apple and YouTube both launch streaming platforms. Writing in his weekly newsletter, Lefsetz said: “Why was Spotify successful? Because of the deep pockets of the owners, who were willing to lose on the way to winning. Beats Music did not have these deep pockets, and Tidal certainly does not. Unless the artists are all willing to kick in double-digit millions, out of their fortunes, to turn the tide.” The main issue, he added, was that not even Jay Z’s name and hip-hop credentials were enough to make people pay more money to stream music. “First and foremost you’ve got to pay for Tidal. And therefore it’s dead on arrival. Just like Apple’s new music service. Because people are cheap. They love their money more than their favourite artists, never forget it. Now if Tidal had a free tier … But it doesn’t. It can’t afford to lose that much money. Just because Jay Z is a famous musician he expects all of his fans to pony up 10 bucks a month? Raw insanity.” Doc. 2 Who really buys vinyl? Middle-aged men are snapping up classic albums by Pink Floyd and Fleetwood Mac for their music collections, leaving hipsters out in the cold The vinyl revival has been hard to miss. While sales of CDs continue to fall, the 12inch record appears to have come back from the dead. The Official Charts company has even added a vinyl Top 40, taking in both singles and albums - something that would have been thought inconceivable a few years ago. In 2007, vinyl sales had slumped to 205,000 (0.1 per cent of UK album sales), but by 2014, this figure had jumped to 1.3million (1.5 per cent of UK album sales). So who is responsible for this surge in sales? The recent annual Record Store Day event would have us believe it is mainly hipsters – kids born in the mid to late 1980s bred on downloading and streaming. For them, buying a record is a novelty, a kitsch item picked up while shopping for designer jeans in Urban Outfitters. However, a scan of the top 20 albums in the charts earlier this month reveals it is packed with older heritage acts or classic rock albums being re-issued for the hundredth time. Classics by Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and Fleetwood Mac are racking up the weeks alongside a new best of Paul Simon. These are albums that have already sold in their millions and are being given the 180g treatment, remastered and repackaged. Even the "younger" bands hail from the 1990s with Blur’s comeback album The Magic Whip sitting at the top spot with their former Britpop adversary Noel Gallagher not far behind with his second solo album. Not only does the top 20 seem predominantly blokey but heavily nostalgic, evidence that the vinyl revival is being driven by the older fans ditching CDs in favour of the format of their youth. Nigel House, manager and co-founder of the Rough Trade records shop confirms this idea. “I see those customers who bought the album originally when it came out and now can’t find them," he says. "I had a customer the other day who told me he had thrown out all his records a while ago and is now in the process of buying them all back again. It was his 60th birthday and people were buying him a collection again. I had another customer who had come over from South Africa the other day, who was in his late 50s and bought all the recent Led Zeppelin records." It seems that when men approach 50 they are buying a turntable rather than a motorcyle. Tom Hodgkinson, editor of The Idler, is 47 and part of this trend. “It’s been really good over the past couple of months to get the vinyl back down from the loft and buy a second-hand record player.” Tom grew up with records. “My parents had records playing in the house all the time on the stereo; we used to listen to Abba and Roxy Music. When I was 12, I bought my first LP, which was The Beatles greatest hits compilation. My mum bought my brother and I little portable record players and we sat at home listening to records all the time. At the weekend, I would go to Our Price to buy the new releases.” It is not just new vinyl that is selling more; second-hand record shops have been capitalising on vinyl’s recent popularity. Alan Dobrin, owner of Alan's Records in East Finchley, has seen a rise in vinyl sales. “My best CD customer, who is in his late thirties and has been collecting CDs for 20 years, is now collecting vinyl and replicating everything he has on CD. It used to be the other way around.” Over the Record Store Day weekend, Alan noticed more families visiting the shop than ever before, telling me that the kids bought “classic stuff - the Beatles, Stones and Pink Floyd”, while the fathers and grandfathers were buying records as well. “Guys in their 50s who haven’t bought a record in 20 years were picking stuff up,” he says. Vinyl tends to make music enthusiasts misty-eyed when they talk about it because it is bound up with the romance of the first single they bought or the Dansette record player that they saved up for. It remains to be seen whether the rebirth of vinyl will continue on its upward trajectory. What the vinyl charts make clear is that the older demographic are as much part of its revived fortunes as the hipsters buying it for the first time. Doc. 3 Doc. 4 Now it's much more than just music It’s a fact: no one makes good music anymore.

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